Holistic Homesteading: A Guide to a Sustainable and Regenerative Lifestyle
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About this ebook
Make healthier life choices to heal yourself and the environment through self-sufficiency. The Happy Holistic Homestead by Roxanne Ahern provides the tools for living slowly, intentionally, and better through permaculture, edible gardening, and organic farming.
Live the Homestead Life. Ahern’s book guides new and seasoned homesteaders in improving personal and environmental health. The Happy Holistic Homestead is geared toward people who are interested in pursuing intentional lifestyles and organic farming methods. It is both for those who have access to land and those who are interested in retrofitting urban and suburban lifestyles and landscapes to shift towards sustainability.
Utilize Sustainable Organic Farming Techniques. Learn about permaculture design, holistic nutrition, and sustainable farming in rural and urban settings. The Happy Holistic Homestead covers how to use organic soil and zero chemicals to grow the best vegetables and fruits, responsible and humane animal husbandry that improves the ground and carbon sequestration, as well as the best canning and preserving techniques. Ahern also provides tips on safely foraging for flowers and mushrooms.
Read The Happy Holistic Homestead and learn:
- Permaculture practices that can be used in rural and urban spaces
- How to get the most out of your food through holistic nutrition
- The best techniques for canning and preserving your fruits and vegetables
- How to bake sourdough bread and how to create your own sourdough culture
If you enjoyed books such as The Modern Homestead Garden, The Encyclopedia of Country Living, and Beginner's Guide to Preserving, your next read should be The Happy Holistic Homestead.
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Book preview
Holistic Homesteading - Roxanne Ahern
Praise for Holistic Homesteading
If you want to live off the land and grow a regenerative homestead, this book is a great primer into essential steps: from siting your garden and understanding design principles to wild foraging and home preserves. Roxanne is full of good advice!
—Zach Loeks, director of the Ecosystem Solution Institute and author of The Permaculture Market Garden and The Edible Ecosystem Solution
"In Holistic Homesteading, Roxanne Ahern lays out the why and the how of living a more grounded and meaningful existence through the simple, beautiful, everyday acts of home production. It was once commonplace for our ancestors to mark the days and the seasons through the production happening in the home: the flush of the summer garden, the work of storage in autumn, the renewal and abundance of spring, the simple dance between human culture and animal husbandry and the delicate care of the plant world. Holistic Homesteading invites us back in to participate in this most essential and meaningful of human tasks: the work and joy of making a living from the land and reveling in its abundance."
—Dr. Ashley Colby, environmental sociologist, director of Rizoma Field School, and author of Subsistence Agriculture in the US: Reconnecting to Work, Nature and Community
"Holistic Homesteading offers a wide array of information on finding land, starting a homestead, and enjoying the rhythms of a land-based lifestyle. Filled with practical tips and important things to consider along the way, it’s a perfect book for inspiration at any point in your homesteading journey."
—Tao Orion, Resilience Permaculture Design, LLC, author of Beyond the War on Invasive Species: A Permaculture Approach to Ecosystem Restoration
Holistic
Homesteading
A Guide to a Sustainable
and Regenerative
Lifestyle
By Roxanne Ahern
Coral Gables, FL
Copyright © 2022 by Roxanne Ahern.
Published by Yellow Pear Press, a division of Mango Media Inc.
Cover Design & Art Direction: Morgane Leoni
Cover Photo: valya82/Adobe Stock
Layout & Design: Katia Mena
Images used under license of Adobe Stock
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Coral Gables, FL 33134 USA
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Holistic Homesteading: A Guide to a Sustainable and Regenerative Lifestyle
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication number: 2022939088
ISBN: (print) 978-1-64250-995-3, (ebook) 978-1-64250-996-0
BISAC category code GAR022000, GARDENING / Techniques
Printed in the United States of America
This book is for the microbes.
Their important work was unnoticed for most of human history, and we are currently only beginning to scratch the surface. Let them be a reminder to keep looking closer, and to never underestimate the power of things we do not yet understand.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter 1—Planning a Regenerative Future
Ideas for Generating Income on a Homestead or Farm
Planning a Business
Chapter 2—Choosing Your Homestead:
Site and Scale
Scale
How to Choose a Location and Land
Chapter 3—Gardening for an
Abundant Food Supply
Research Natives or Bio Regionally Appropriate Plants
Planning a Garden
What Is Permaculture?
What Is a Guild?
Growing Food without Chemicals
Growing Mushrooms
Retrofitting Urban and Suburban Areas for Food Production
Chapter 4—Foraging
Foraging Ethics/Etiquette
A Few Forages
Make Wild Violet Tea
Chapter 5—Food Preservation
Canning
Fermentation
Freezing
Freeze Drying
Dehydration
Curing
Root Cellaring
Chapter 6—Baking and Cooking
with Sourdough Culture
Making a Starter Culture
Sourdough Bread
Crackers
Tortillas
Biscuits
Waffles
Pancakes
Pasta
Dutch Baby Pancake
Shortbread Cookies
Sage’s Special Honey White
Conclusion
Additional Resources
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Introduction
What is holistic homesteading? What makes it different than regular homesteading? What do I mean by a sustainable and regenerative lifestyle? To me the word homesteader describes anyone who works toward self-sufficiency. The definition need not be limited to folks who grow every bite of food they eat themselves and only wear things they make while living in a home they fashioned with their own hands. Although, if this is you, you have my unyielding respect.
A homesteader is a person who makes an effort to learn skills that will enable them to be more self-sufficient. This can manifest differently for different people based on their interests and abilities. A homesteader might want to grow and/or preserve food, build things, practice animal husbandry, learn how to butcher or cure meat, sew or crochet, the list goes on.
In our modern world, I do not believe that it is necessary to live on acreage to be a homesteader. There are suburban and urban homesteaders who live in subdivisions and apartments who are more capable than I am at many homestead-type skills. Inversely, many who own land are still perfectly content being completely reliant on supply chains entirely out of their control. Being a homesteader is not exclusive to the amount of land one has; instead, it is a mindset.
Now that the meaning of the term homesteader
has been established, let’s explore what is meant by the words holistic, sustainable, and regenerative. Holistic describes a way of looking at situations in which we take entire systems into account, rather than trying to understand them based on their isolated parts. Sustainable practices could continue without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs. Regenerate means to regrow, generate anew, or be reformed or reborn. In the last several generations (and some would argue since the beginning of human agriculture, but that debate is beyond the scope of this book), our planet and our bodies have been in a state of degeneration. We have used methods that are reductionist and admittedly unsustainable. We have continuously tilled the earth for thousands of years, which has annihilated soil life and reduced the nutritional value of our food. More recently in human history we have taken to pouring pesticides, herbicides, and chemical fertilizers onto the soil. These chemicals have made their way into our bodies and have taken their toll. Not to mention the pollutants and chemicals in our water, air, and personal care products. The use of packaging and the amount of fuel that goes into simply transporting products from one place to another creates more pollution.
My homesteading journey began with personal health. I felt unwell and had a litany of health issues until I went on a retreat for a week around the age of twenty. They provided the food, all high-quality and healthy, and I felt like an entirely new person afterward. I became keenly aware of how the food I ate directly impacted the way I felt. This experience changed the course of my life. I began pursuing a career in holistic nutrition, which eventually led me to soil health because I quickly learned it didn’t matter how many healthy foods
are piled on a person’s plate; food grown on soil barren of vitamins and minerals is also barren of vitamins and minerals. Animal products derived from animals raised on feedlots or in confinement houses and fed genetically modified grain and pumped full of antibiotics and growth hormones cannot nourish us in the same way as animals that are allowed to forage, express the characteristics innate to their species, and have access to fresh air and sunshine.
The holistic homesteader, then, works not just toward self-sufficiency but also toward restoring the health of their body and the earth. They work to rebuild the humus in the soil and the microbiomes in their body. They avoid products and practices harmful to other people and the environment. When confronted with an unsavory side effect of a practice they were using, they resolve to find or create a new practice. They see the natural world as a partner meant to be respected, not an adversary to overcome.
Humans have done tremendous damage to the earth and their bodies over the last few generations. We have used chemicals in agriculture and in our homes, and have eaten foods sold to us under a pretext of safety, but now consequences of these actions have started mounting in the form of agricultural dead zones, animal extinctions, and increasing disease rates. It has become impossible to ignore the facts. Just as cigarettes were promised to be safe, right up until the moment big tobacco began paying out tremendous lawsuits (and even after), today’s chemical and food companies will have to pay the piper at some point. For example, RoundUp is still sold at many stores, even after being ordered to pay out over $2 billion to cancer patients in a single year. Bayer still denies their product causes cancer and many people still use this product as I write this.
For the first time since 1915–1918, the human lifespan in the United States has decreased for three years in a row. The estimated causes of this are rising suicide rates, more drug overdoses, and increasing rates of liver disease. When researchers look at populations throughout the world that have the highest life spans, some of the factors these people have in common are a healthy diet of whole foods with little or no processed foods, active lifestyles, a sense of purpose that continues into old age, strong ties with family, friends, and community, and a healthy environment.
In the western world, we spend most of our time inside and away from people we love. We live on convenience food because busyness has somehow become equated with success. We rush children to activities to enrich them as if simply spending intentional time with them wouldn’t. It is common not even to know our neighbors’ names. Our nation has high obesity, cancer, diabetes, and mental illness rates. Our systems are clearly broken, that cannot possibly be denied, but there is still time to fix things if new systems are created and fresh paradigms are instilled.
As we reach a tipping point in terms of planetary and human health, it is important that we create and implement new systems and practices designed to create improvement, not maintain the status quo. Just like a sick person needs a higher level of care and nurturing, our bodies and the earth need nurturing now. When an ill person is not tended to, their condition often worsens, leading to hospitalization or death. Consider yourself a member of the triage for nature; under the loving care of our efforts, the world can and will heal. And so can we.